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Page 1844, results 46076 - 46100

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Water-quality data for selected streams in the Mississippi Alluvial Plain ecoregion, northwestern Mississippi, September – October 2007
Matthew B. Hicks, Shane J. Stocks
2010, Data Series 493
From September through October 2007, the U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, collected and analyzed water-quality samples from streams in the Yazoo River basin within the Mississippi Alluvial Plain ecoregion in northwestern Mississippi. Water-quality samples were collected at 56 sites in the study area and...
Diatom changes in two Uinta mountain lakes, Utah, USA: Responses to anthropogenic and natural atmospheric inputs
Katrina Moser, Jessica S. Mordecai, Richard L. Reynolds, Joseph G. Rosenbaum, Michael E. Ketterer
2010, Hydrobiologia (648) 91-108
Diatom assemblages in sediments from two subalpine lakes in the Uinta Mountains, Utah, show asynchronous changes that are related to both anthropogenic and natural inputs of dust. These lakes are downwind of sources of atmospheric inputs originating from mining, industrial, urban, agricultural and natural sources that are distributed within tens...
The MW 7.0 Haiti Earthquake of January 12, 2010: USGS/EERI Advance Reconnaissance Team Report
Marc O. Eberhard, Steven Baldridge, Justin Marshall, Walter Mooney, Glenn J. Rix
2010, Open-File Report 2010-1048
Executive Summary A field reconnaissance in Haiti by a five-member team with expertise in seismology and earthquake engineering has revealed a number of factors that led to catastrophic losses of life and property during the January 12, 2010, Mw 7.0 earthquake. The field study was conducted from January 26 to...
Biogeochemical redox processes and their impact on contaminant dynamics
Thomas Borch, Ruben Kretzschmar, Andreas Kappler, Philippe Van Cappellen, Matthew Ginder-Vogel, Kate M. Campbell
2010, Environmental Science & Technology (44) 15-23
Life and element cycling on Earth is directly related to electron transfer (or redox) reactions. An understanding of biogeochemical redox processes is crucial for predicting and protecting environmental health and can provide new opportunities for engineered remediation strategies. Energy can be released and stored by means of redox reactions via...
Assessment of Energetic Compounds, Semi-volatile Organic Compounds, and Trace Elements in Streambed Sediment and Stream Water from Streams Draining Munitions Firing Points and Impact Areas, Fort Riley, Kansas, 2007-08
R.L. Coiner, L. M. Pope, H. E. Mehl
2010, Scientific Investigations Report 2010-5021
An assessment of energetic compounds (explosive and propellant residues) and associated semi-volatile organic compounds (SVOCs) and trace elements in streambed sediment and stream water from streams draining munitions firing points and impact areas at Fort Riley, northeast Kansas, was performed during 2007-08 by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) in cooperation...
The influence of nutrients and physical habitat in regulating algal biomass in agricultural streams
Mark D. Munn, Jeffrey W. Frey, Anthony J. Tesoriero
2010, Environmental Management (45) 603-615
This study examined the relative influence of nutrients (nitrogen and phosphorus) and habitat on algal biomass in five agricultural regions of the United States. Sites were selected to capture a range of nutrient conditions, with 136 sites distributed over five study areas. Samples were collected in either 2003 or 2004,...
Relations Between Rainfall and Postfire Debris-Flow and Flood Magnitudes for Emergency-Response Planning, San Gabriel Mountains, Southern California
Susan H. Cannon, Eric M. Boldt, Jason W. Kean, Jayme Laber, Dennis M. Staley
2010, Open-File Report 2010-1039
Following wildfires, emergency-response and public-safety agencies are faced often with making evacuation decisions and deploying resources both well in advance of each coming winter storm and during storms themselves. Information critical to this process is provided for recently burned areas in the San Gabriel Mountains of southern California. The National...
Reported Historic Asbestos Mines, Historic Asbestos Prospects, and Other Natural Occurrences of Asbestos in Oregon and Washington
Bradley S. Van Gosen
2010, Open-File Report 2010-1041
This map and its accompanying dataset provide information for 51 natural occurrences of asbestos in Washington and Oregon, using descriptions found in the geologic literature. Data on location, mineralogy, geology, and relevant literature for each asbestos site are provided. Using the map and digital data in this report, the user...
EAARL coastal topography-western Florida, post-Hurricane Charley, 2004: seamless (bare earth and submerged.
Amar Nayegandhi, Jamie M. Bonisteel, C. Wayne Wright, A. H. Sallenger, John Brock, Xan Yates
2010, Data Series 482
Project Description These remotely sensed, geographically referenced elevation measurements of lidar-derived seamless (bare-earth and submerged) topography were produced as a collaborative effort between the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), Coastal and Marine Geology Program (CMGP), St. Petersburg, FL, and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), Wallops Flight Facility, VA. This project provides...
Assessment of physical, chemical, and hydrologic factors affecting the infiltration of treated wastewater in the New Jersey Coastal Plain, with emphasis on the Hammonton Land Application Facility
Timothy J. Reilly, Kristin M. Romanok, Steven Tessler, Jeffrey M. Fischer
2010, Scientific Investigations Report 2010-5006
A hydrogeologic and water-quality investigation of the Hammonton Land Application Facility (Hammonton LAF) in Hammonton, New Jersey, was conducted to determine the factors that impede the infiltration of treated wastewater and to assess the potential for similar conditions to exist elsewhere in the Coastal Plain of New Jersey (particularly within...
Total dissolved gas and water temperature in the lower Columbia River, Oregon and Washington, water year 2009: Quality-assurance data and comparison to water-quality standards
Dwight Q. Tanner, Heather M. Bragg, Matthew W. Johnston
2010, Open-File Report 2009-1288
Significant Findings  When water is released through the spillways of dams, air is entrained in the water, increasing the downstream concentration of dissolved gases. Excess dissolved-gas concentrations can have adverse effects on freshwater aquatic life. The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), in cooperation with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, collected...
The heat is on: Desert tortoises and survival
Stephen M. Wessells, Steven E. Schwarzbach
2010, General Information Product 98
Purpose: To highlight USGS scientists' research and build support for the work being done to help with desert tortoise recovery. To educate people about desert tortoises, their habitat needs, and what people might do to help. Length: 30 minutes...
Bathymetric and Velocimetric Survey and Assessment of Habitat for Pallid Sturgeon on the Mississippi River in the Vicinity of the Proposed Interstate 70 Bridge at St. Louis, Missouri
Richard J. Huizinga, Caroline M. Elliott, Robert B. Jacobson
2010, Scientific Investigations Report 2010-5017
A bathymetric and velocimetry survey was conducted on the Mississippi River in the vicinity of a proposed new bridge for Interstate 70 at St. Louis, Missouri. A multibeam echo sounder mapping system and an acoustic Doppler current profiler were used to obtain channel-bed elevations and vertically averaged and near-bed velocities...
Compilation of Water-Resources Data and Hydrogeologic Setting for the Allison Woods Research Station in Iredell County, North Carolina, 2005-2008
Brad A. Huffman, Joju Abraham
2010, Open-File Report 2010-1015
Water-resources data were collected to describe the hydrologic conditions at the Allison Woods research station near Statesville, North Carolina, in the Piedmont Physiographic Province of North Carolina. Data collected by the U.S. Geological Survey and the North Carolina Department of Environment and Natural Resources, Division of Water Quality, from April...
Changes in the chemistry of shallow groundwater related to the 2008 injection of CO2 at the ZERT field site, Bozeman, Montana
Yousif K. Kharaka, James J. Thordsen, Evangelos Kakouros, Gil Ambats, William N. Herkelrath, Sarah R. Beers, J.T. Birkholzer, J. A. Apps, Nicholas F. Spycher, Liange Zheng, Robert C. Trautz, Henry W. Rauch, K.S. Gullickson
2010, Environmental Earth Sciences (60) 273-284
Approximately 300 kg/day of food-grade CO2 was injected through a perforated pipe placed horizontally 2–2.3 m deep during July 9–August 7, 2008 at the MSU-ZERT field test to evaluate atmospheric and near-surface monitoring and detection techniques applicable to the subsurface storage and potential leakage of CO2. As part of this multidisciplinary research project,...
Home-range size and site tenacity of overwintering Le Conte's Sparrows in a fire managed prairie
Heather Baldwin, Clinton W. Jeske, Melissa A. Powell, Paul C. Chadwick, Wylie C. Barrow Jr.
2010, Wilson Journal of Ornithology (122) 139-145
We evaluated home-range size and site tenacity of Le Conte's Sparrows (Ammodramus lecontii) during winter 2002–2003 at Brazoria National Wildlife Refuge, Texas. Twenty-six wintering Le Conte's Sparrows were radiomarked in 1- and 2-year post-burn units, and monitored for ∼10 days. Additionally, 1-ha plots on each 1-, 2- and 3-year...
Sulfosalt melts: Evidence of high-temperature cvapor transport of metals in the formation of high-sulfidation lode gold deposits
John Mavrogenes, Richard W. Henley, Agnes G. Reyes, Byron R. Berger
2010, Economic Geology (105) 257-262
In enargite-gold (high-sulfidation) vein deposits, magmatic fluid is considered responsible for the transport of metals and sulfur into the depositional regime. New data from Field-Emission SEM analyses of sulfosalt mineral assemblages (primarily enargite and tennantite) from El Indio, Chile, and Summitville, Colorado, provide direct evidence of high-temperature deposition, including the...
Assessing effects of water abstraction on fish assemblages in Mediterranean streams
Lluis Benejam, Paul L. Angermeier, Antoni Munne, Emili García-Berthou
2010, Freshwater Biology (55) 628-642
1. Water abstraction strongly affects streams in arid and semiarid ecosystems, particularly where there is a Mediterranean climate. Excessive abstraction reduces the availability of water for human uses downstream and impairs the capacity of streams to support native biota. 2. We investigated the flow regime and related variables in...
The 23rd Pacific Climate Workshop (PACLIM)
Scott W. Starratt
2010, Quaternary International (215) 1-2
The 23rd Pacific Climate Workshop (PACLIM) was held May 13–16, 2007 at the Asilomar Conference Grounds in Pacific Grove, California, in what turned out to be a relatively dry spring on the central California coast. What a change from 2006, which was the sixth wettest year of the 101 years...
Contributions towards a review of the genus Rhynchelmis Hoffmeister (Clitellata: Lumbriculidae)
Steven V. Fend, Ralph O. Brinkhurst
2010, Zootaxa
Morphological characters for several Palearctic taxa attributed by recent authors to the genus Rhynchelmis Hoffmeister, 1843 were reviewed using new or previously studied museum specimens. The genus Rhynchelmis s. lat. was supported, and the Palearctic subgenus Rhynchelmis (Rhynchelmis) was proposed, based on several probable synapomorphies: longitudinal muscles with lateral margins curled; strong dorsolateral-transverse muscles; vasa deferentia...
Patterns and scales of phytoplankton variability in estuarine: Coastal ecosystems
James E. Cloern, Alan D. Jassby
2010, Estuaries and Coasts (33) 230-241
Phytoplankton variability is a primary driver of chemical and biological dynamics in the coastal zone because it directly affects water quality, biogeochemical cycling of reactive elements, and food supply to consumer organisms. Much has been learned about patterns of phytoplankton variability within individual ecosystems, but patterns have not been compared...
Representing pump-capacity relations in groundwater simulation models
Leonard F. Konikow
2010, Ground Water (48) 106-110
The yield (or discharge) of constant-speed pumps varies with the total dynamic head (or lift) against which the pump is discharging. The variation in yield over the operating range of the pump may be substantial. In groundwater simulations that are used for management evaluations or other purposes, where predictive accuracy...
Microclimate and limits to photosynthesis in a diverse community of hypolithic cyanobacteria in northern Australia
Christopher R. Tracy, Claire Streten-Joyce, Robert Dalton, Kenneth E. Nussear, Karen S. Gibb, Keith A. Christian
2010, Environmental Microbiology (12) 592-607
Hypolithic microbes, primarily cyanobacteria, inhabit the highly specialized microhabitats under translucent rocks in extreme environments. Here we report findings from hypolithic cyanobacteria found under three types of translucent rocks (quartz, prehnite, agate) in a semiarid region of tropical Australia. We investigated the photosynthetic responses of the cyanobacterial communities to light,...
Quantifying human disturbance in watersheds: Variable selection and performance of a GIS-based disturbance index for predicting the biological condition of perennial streams
James A. Falcone, Daren M. Carlisle, Lisa C. Weber
2010, Ecological Indicators (10) 264-273
Characterizing the relative severity of human disturbance in watersheds is often part of stream assessments and is frequently done with the aid of Geographic Information System (GIS)-derived data. However, the choice of variables and how they are used to quantify disturbance are often subjective. In this study, we developed a...
Evidence of panmixia between sympatric life history forms of coastal cutthroat trout in two lower Columbia River tributaries
Jeffrey R. Johnson, Jason Baumsteiger, Joseph D. Zydlewski, J. Michael Hudson, William R. Ardren
2010, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (30) 691-701
Coastal cutthroat trout Oncorhynchus clarkii clarkii exhibit resident and migratory life history strategies that often occur sympatrically, but the relationship between these forms within a population is poorly characterized. Through use of passive integrated transponder technology, migratory and resident coastal cutthroat trout were identified in two lower Columbia River tributaries (Abernathy Creek...